The second murderer A Philip Marlowe novel

Denise Mina

Book - 2023

"Has Philip Marlowe finally met his match? It's early fall when a heatwave descends on Los Angeles. Private Detective Philip Marlowe is called to the Montgomery estate, an almost mythic place sitting high on top of Beverly Hills. Wealthy socialite Chrissie Montgomery is missing. Young, naïve, and set to inherit an enormous fortune, she's a walking target, ripe for someone to get their claws into. Her dying father and his sultry bottle-blonde girlfriend want her found before that happens. To make sure, they've got Anne Riordan--now head of her own all-female detective agency--on the case, too. The search for Chrissie takes the two investigators from the Montgomery mansion to the roughest neighborhoods of LA, through dive... bars and boarding houses and out to Skid Row. And that's all before they find the body at The Brody Hotel. Who will get to Chrissie first? And what happens when a woman doesn't want to be found? In The Second Murderer, Denise Mina becomes the first woman to recreate Raymond Chandler's infamous detective, delivering a clever and timely new take on Philip Marlowe, as well as a propulsive, dark, and witty mystery all its own"--

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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Mulholland Books/Little, Brown and Company [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Denise Mina (-)
Edition
First North American edition
Item Description
Originally published in the United Kingdom by Harvill Seeker: July 2023.
Physical Description
245 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780316265645
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Mina (The Less Dead) successfully emulates the language and tone of Raymond Chandler's hard-boiled novels featuring California P.I. Marlowe in this terrific pastiche. Though Marlowe has been instrumental in solving the murder of cowboy actor Pasco Pete, the gumshoe is unsettled by a sense he missed something. There's no time to reopen the investigation, however, as he's summoned to help the überwealthy Chadwick Montgomery track down his missing 22-year-old daughter, Chrissie, who vanished from the family estate the morning after her engagement party. Despite his distaste for Montgomery and uncertainty about whether Chrissie wants to be found, Marlowe accepts the case, which quickly leads to the discovery of multiple bodies, the revelation of Montgomery family secrets, and possible links to Pasco Pete's death. The search is further complicated by the presence of Marlowe's professional rival, detective Anne Riordan, whom Montgomery has also retained to find Chrissie. On top of nailing Chandler's atmospherics ("Out on Santa Monica the heat was oiling up from the ground. Dust whipped past us on a spiteful breeze"), Mina delivers a truly surprising plot. Noir fans will hope Mina returns to the mean streets of L.A. again soon. Agent: Henry Dunow, Dunow, Carlson & Lerner Literary. (Aug.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The versatile Mina adds still another arrow to her quiver in this authorized pastiche in which Raymond Chandler's hard-boiled private eye searches for a woman who definitely doesn't want to be found. In fact, Marlowe's strong impression is that wealthy LA patriarch Chadwick Montgomery III doesn't really want to find Chrissie, his daughter and heir; he's chosen Marlowe's one-man agency, the narrator/hero decides, to look for her because he wants to keep the investigation under wraps and end in failure. Instead, Marlowe locates Chrissie, who was "easier to find than an optimist in a casino," in less than a day and then has to decide what to do next. Chrissie would rather work as "Joan Baudelaire" at Peggy Zimmerman's art gallery than return to the home of her intolerant, abusive father and his enigmatic secretary, Anneliese Lyle. The decision about her fate isn't Marlowe's alone, however, since the all-female detective agency headed by Anne Riordan, whom Marlowe met 83 years ago in Farewell, My Lovely, turns out to be on her trail as well. When Marlowe discovers Chrissie--who's gone to the seedy Brody Hotel apparently to meet a nonexistent fellow named Peter West--standing over the corpse of a man who reportedly died months ago several thousand miles away, the case instantly becomes more urgent. But Mina's pastiche, less literal than Robert B. Parker's Poodle Springs (1989) and less glum than Benjamin Black's The Black-Eyed Blonde (2014), is more playful in its early stages, as Mina cheekily piles on Marlowe's trademark similes, though it darkens considerably as it approaches its fade-out. Female-forward in all sorts of ways--quite a change of pace for the legendary gumshoe. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.